Art every where
Chopped !
An eye of a tree
Woods
Winter Sunrise
A page -- Nicholas Humphrey's "Soul Dust"
Mummy's pet, is that you....?
The Gregundrum / Figure 2
Time Flow
Pontiac
Do you see violet....?
A farmer
Choice of colours
Fall Leaves
Lucky the leaf.....
Color
Privatization of sensation ~ Figure 12
A stream in Spring
. . . like a smile of a wind
Farfalla
Religion explained
^ ^
A little girl's Art
Selfish gene
EXISTENTIAL ANGST
The Fracture of An Illusion
“It is a beauteous evening, calm and free”
Lawns of Flower Conservatory
Figure 6.2 ~ Penfield homunculus
At Lands' End
Sylva
A photo session by Water Temple
A view across from Water Temple
Just watch -- I'll move it
Sulphrous landscape
Figure 8.4. T-O map, Leipzig, Eleventh century
Figure 12.6 Albert Einstein with Kurt Godel
Thrasymachus's challenge
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
Attribution + non Commercial
- Photo replaced on 11 Nov 2019
-
72 visits
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
The present American economy requires that certain jobs have low wages: cleaning houses, caring for children, preparing fast food, picking vegetables, waiting on tables, doing heavy labor, washing dishes, washing cars, gardening, checking groceries, and so on. In order to support the lifestyles of three-quarters of our population, one quarter of our work force must be paid low wages. These are the people who make two-income families possible, because they take care of the house and the children, allow fast food outlets, restaurants, and hotels to exist, and perform other tedious unpleasant, unsafe, and physically difficult jobs that support middle', upper-middle, and upper-class life.
It is a myth that all the people so employed can life themselves up by their bootstraps, get educated, spend thriftily, save, invest, and get out of poverty -- that is, to get decent housing in a safe neighborhood, adequate food, health care, and education for their children. Even if all the present lower-tier workers moved into the upper tier, the country would still need a quarter of the population, working at low wages, to take care of the children, clean the house, work in fast food places, pick the lettuce, weed the lawns, wait on tables, wash the cars, and so on. This economy absolutely relies on hard-working people whose pay does not reflect their contribution to the economy.
In short, those on the ground floor of our economy are holding up those on the upper floors -- and they work hard to do so. But the structure of our economy does not allow their pay to be commensurate with their contribution to the economy as a whole. ~ Page 420/421
Sign-in to write a comment.